Novartis results: https://www.novartis.com/investors/financia...arterly-results
Interactive Brokers (IBKR), IBKR users, welcome!
Interactive Brokers (IBKR), IBKR users, welcome!
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Jan 31 2024, 02:48 PM
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#1141
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Senior Member
8,667 posts Joined: Aug 2019 From: Penang <-> Singapore |
Novartis results: https://www.novartis.com/investors/financia...arterly-results
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Jan 31 2024, 04:03 PM
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#1142
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Senior Member
8,667 posts Joined: Aug 2019 From: Penang <-> Singapore |
Novo Nordisk Q4 23 results: https://www.novonordisk.com/content/nncorp/...tml#results2023
GSK Q4 23 results: https://www.gsk.com/en-gb/investors/quarterly-results/ Mastercard announcing results later this evening: https://investor.mastercard.com/financials-...ts/default.aspx |
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Jan 31 2024, 04:15 PM
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#1143
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Senior Member
8,667 posts Joined: Aug 2019 From: Penang <-> Singapore |
QUOTE(Gwynbleidd @ Jun 11 2023, 04:37 PM) QUOTE(Yggdrasil @ Nov 10 2023, 01:24 PM) SGOV is one of the Qualified Interest Income. Although IBKR takes 30% away from your dividend for withholding tax, you will be refunded this 30% around early next year once IRS officially declares the exemption. It's nearing the end of January 2024, I still don't see IBKR refund my 30% WHT deducted out of my BIL holdings. Can anyone confirm the exact date of WHT refund for last year/previous years? Thanks. |
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Feb 1 2024, 10:52 AM
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#1144
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Senior Member
8,667 posts Joined: Aug 2019 From: Penang <-> Singapore |
QUOTE(jasontoh @ Feb 1 2024, 10:46 AM) You are invested in this SGOV also? Is it capital guaranteed, or we can still lose money when the price move down. No, for liquidity reasons I go for BIL, but it's the same product, just different fund managers (SGOV - Blackrock, BIL - State Street). And no, it is not capital guaranteed. If short-term US T-bill rates move volatile enough T-bill ETF can still lose money. And of course, if Uncle Sam can't service its own debt then do expect volatile movements in the ETF price as well. There's an additional complexity in using ETF which is the premium/discount over the underlying asset's NAV. This is less of an issue with liquid ETF but can be a problem for less liquid ones. You probably don't have to worry too much about this for BIL or SGOV. jasontoh liked this post
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Feb 1 2024, 02:07 PM
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#1145
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Senior Member
8,667 posts Joined: Aug 2019 From: Penang <-> Singapore |
Shell results: https://www.shell.com/investors/results-and...st-results.html
Roche results: https://www.roche.com/investors Sanofi results: https://www.sanofi.com/en/investors/financi...q4-results-2023 Merck reporting premarket; AAPL, Meta and AMZN reporting aftermarket today (early morning tomorrow). |
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Feb 2 2024, 03:34 PM
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#1146
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Senior Member
8,667 posts Joined: Aug 2019 From: Penang <-> Singapore |
Big Oil and some Big Pharma reporting today: ExxonMobil: https://investor.exxonmobil.com/news-events...3-earnings-call Chevron: https://www.chevron.com/investors Abbvie: https://investors.abbvie.com/financial-releases Bristol Myers Squibb: https://www.bms.com/investors/financial-rep...ly-results.html --------------------------------- Jomo wrote an interesting article on PPP: https://mysinchew.sinchew.com.my/news/20240...7068556021db257 This post has been edited by TOS: Feb 2 2024, 03:34 PM lamode liked this post
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Feb 5 2024, 10:51 PM
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#1147
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Senior Member
8,667 posts Joined: Aug 2019 From: Penang <-> Singapore |
FT Big Tech
Big Tech boosts profits by $10bn with accounting change to server life estimate Alphabet, Amazon, Microsoft and Meta have all shifted estimates of how long they will use technical equipment by Tabby Kinder and Camilla Hodgson in San Francisco and Cristina Criddle in London (10 HOURS AGO) QUOTE ![]() Tech companies have said they will make major investments in their technical infrastructure this year as they develop artificial intelligence systems © FT montage/EPA-EFE Microsoft, Google, Meta and Amazon added almost $10bn to their profits in the past two years by extending the estimated working life of their servers, an accounting change that will help soften the blow of future costs such as developing generative artificial intelligence. The Big Tech companies, which all reported strong quarterly growth in earnings last week, have in recent years been reviewing how they accounted for the predicted working life of their technical equipment, at the same time as they came under pressure to cut costs and began to reallocate resources towards AI products. It resulted in a $6bn boost to income at Google and Microsoft alone last year. Other groups, such as Amazon, have extended the estimated lifespan of their assets even further this month, which will mean more profits this year. As part of their financial accounting, companies estimate how long assets will last in order to work out how quickly to depreciate them, impacting how much they charge against profits each year. Extending the estimated life of the assets reduces the depreciation charges, in this case adding about $10bn to the companies’ collective reported earnings. If the estimates are right and the companies are able to get more use out of their servers, it would also reduce the amount they spend in future, giving them more mileage on the huge capital spending expected on AI. At the same time companies are anticipating supply chain issues because of a shortage of semiconductors — the chips crucial to central processing units that power servers and computers. The companies have warned investors they will make major investments in their technical infrastructure this year as they develop cutting-edge generative AI systems. Big Tech companies were “stuck between investors turning increasingly to margins, profitability and capital returns, and the need to aggressively invest in cloud and AI,” said Youssef Squali from Truist Securities. When “money is flowing and margins are no issue”, stretching the lifespan of servers was not a “top priority”, he said. Now, companies were increasing capex while trying to “safeguard against margin dilution”. Such accounting changes were “probably something that will continue”, he added. Google’s parent company Alphabet reduced depreciation costs by extending the working life of its servers and network equipment from four and five years respectively to six years, saving $3.9bn in 2023 and boosting net income by $3bn for the year, according to its accounts. Microsoft similarly decided its servers would last for six years, not four, which increased its net income by $3bn last year. It said last week that “advances in technology” and “increased efficiencies” in how its operates its equipment allowed it to extend its estimated life. Meta, the parent company of Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp, reduced depreciation expenses by $860mn in 2022, which added $693mn to net income that year. Meta’s depreciation expenses increased in 2023, however, and this week it warned they would increase by a larger amount in 2024. Meanwhile, Amazon improved its income by $2.8bn in 2022 thanks to a reduction in depreciation costs of $3.6bn as it extended the life of its servers from four to five years. This week, Amazon said it had further extended the life of its servers, which it predicted would boost operating income by $3.1bn in 2024, generating additional profits of $900mn in the first quarter alone. The rewards from the depreciation costs, however, are far outweighed by each companies’ expected capital expenditure this year, as they invest large sums to build new data centre architecture and improve their technical infrastructure to expand AI services, such as cloud computing software and generative AI chatbots. Scott Kessler, an investment researcher at Third Bridge, said the depreciation savings should be considered in the context of the hundreds of billions in revenues the groups made, noting that several billion dollars for a Big Tech company was “essentially a rounding error”. Meta revised up its predicted capital expenditure for 2024 this week to $30bn to $37bn, $2bn more than expected. Microsoft and Google also warned of rising technical costs this year to develop AI. |
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Feb 8 2024, 07:12 PM
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#1148
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Senior Member
8,667 posts Joined: Aug 2019 From: Penang <-> Singapore |
Unilever results: https://www.unilever.com/investors/results-...latest-results/
QUOTE(Yggdrasil @ Feb 8 2024, 06:07 PM) I just checked my YTD statement and some WHT had already been refunded this year. It shows up as positive under Withholding Tax. Uhmm, nothing leh![]() ![]() By the way, I am coming to Subang area on the first week of March to visit old friends (and possibly someone special... Let me know if you guys wanna meet. In particular, pinging Ramjade dwRK Takudan MasBoleh! |
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Feb 9 2024, 09:02 PM
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#1149
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Senior Member
8,667 posts Joined: Aug 2019 From: Penang <-> Singapore |
QUOTE(Yggdrasil @ Feb 9 2024, 02:20 PM) ![]() Refund should look something like this. So far received refund for Nov 2023 only. Not sure if Dec 2023 will be refunded next year or it's still processing. Nothing shows up for me over there. All -ve numbers. Can other BIL holders confirm this? Thanks. |
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Feb 9 2024, 11:12 PM
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#1150
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Senior Member
8,667 posts Joined: Aug 2019 From: Penang <-> Singapore |
QUOTE(Yggdrasil @ Feb 9 2024, 10:55 PM) I generated Oct 2023 - Feb 2024 to show the WHT that had been deducted and refunded. If I generate YTD, it will only show the refund. In your case you can clearly see the refund is backdated to 2023 even though the statement date is YTD 2024.![]() But in my case the earliest entry under WHT section is 2nd Jan 2024... No backdated entries observed... ![]() |
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Feb 10 2024, 08:56 AM
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#1151
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Senior Member
8,667 posts Joined: Aug 2019 From: Penang <-> Singapore |
QUOTE(Yggdrasil @ Feb 10 2024, 03:04 AM) SGOV and BIL have the same underlying assets lah... They should be structured similarly as well. The ETF is just a wrapper for the underlying 1-3 month US T-bills. I will be checking daily and see when the money comes in... Better pray IBKR's tax guys are efficient... the opportunity costs of reinvestment from those T-bills/notes/bonds discounts/coupons are high given the high interest rate environment... -------------------------- 恭喜发财 to everyone! First day of the Dragon year. This post has been edited by TOS: Feb 10 2024, 08:56 AM |
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Feb 13 2024, 05:17 PM
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#1152
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Senior Member
8,667 posts Joined: Aug 2019 From: Penang <-> Singapore |
QUOTE(Gwynbleidd @ Feb 13 2024, 07:55 AM) Me too. Confirmed the money is back in! (Screenshot below generated from YTD 2024 statement, backdated BIL entries can be clearly observed.) ![]() Gwynbleidd liked this post
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Feb 13 2024, 05:30 PM
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#1153
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Senior Member
8,667 posts Joined: Aug 2019 From: Penang <-> Singapore |
QUOTE(Gwynbleidd @ Feb 13 2024, 07:55 AM) With the refund, my BIL IRR now stands at 4.80%, pretty close to short-term US T-bill rates, albeit the rate can be better if they refund sooner, but definitely better than the old "sell before ex-date then buy on ex-date" strategy... Gwynbleidd liked this post
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Feb 13 2024, 05:35 PM
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#1154
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Senior Member
8,667 posts Joined: Aug 2019 From: Penang <-> Singapore |
QUOTE(TOS @ Feb 13 2024, 05:17 PM) Me too. Confirmed the money is back in! Gwynbleidd do you observe the -0.01 USD entries after each month's distribution in your statement? I believe you are holding BIL via IBKR as well, yes? (Screenshot below generated from YTD 2024 statement, backdated BIL entries can be clearly observed.) ![]() Is that some sort of admin fee paid to IBKR/IRS for their "service"? |
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Feb 13 2024, 07:10 PM
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#1155
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Senior Member
8,667 posts Joined: Aug 2019 From: Penang <-> Singapore |
QUOTE(Gwynbleidd @ Feb 13 2024, 06:07 PM) I was wondering why do you have that. No, I'm not holding BIL, I have ZROZ instead. For short duration holding, I use BOXX, which does not have any distribution so far. Wow bro are you sure you are fine with earning risk-free rates via the box spread strategy? ![]() |
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Feb 14 2024, 12:38 AM
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#1156
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Senior Member
8,667 posts Joined: Aug 2019 From: Penang <-> Singapore |
QUOTE(Gwynbleidd @ Feb 13 2024, 07:47 PM) Tbh, I'm not well versed with it 😂 You should have understood the risks before you invest. Well, for a start the box spread is around 25-50 basis points. And the BOXX has a expense ratio of some 20 basis points... Any concerns with this strategy? https://alphaarchitect.com/2023/05/box-spre...treasury-bills/ If you check the factsheet, it actually underperforms the 1-3 month US T-bill index... https://alphaarchitect.com/wp-content/uploa...X_Factsheet.pdf ------------------------------------- Just stick to BIL/SGOV will do lah. Box strategy requires active management from the fund manager as different options expire at different times, some got called away before expiration. A lot of work involved. And I can see FLEX options involved... not just plain vanilla ones on CBOE. In case of crisis, those illiquid ones may not have any quotations... the NAV will diverge significantly from market value. Wedchar2912 and Gwynbleidd liked this post
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Feb 14 2024, 08:56 AM
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#1157
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Senior Member
8,667 posts Joined: Aug 2019 From: Penang <-> Singapore |
QUOTE(Medufsaid @ Feb 14 2024, 01:05 AM) box spread (with american style options) is how 1r0nyman blew up his robinhood account https://www.reddit.com/r/PMTraders/comments...ow_to_use_them/ Yea vanilla options are easier to deal with, especially plain European ones. More liquid too. Medufsaid liked this post
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Feb 14 2024, 12:16 PM
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#1158
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Senior Member
8,667 posts Joined: Aug 2019 From: Penang <-> Singapore |
An interesting read on Stellantis. Assuming that the 30 billion EUR net cash figure is not some fake figures crated by accountants treated with abalone dinner the night before the numbers are printed out, plus 11 billion EUR of FCF, this company is too tempting... especially when EUR interest rates are high.
FT Opinion: Lex Stellantis makes an unlikely market darling for car industry investors Carmaker has cleaned up its act and become a good turnaround story since 2020 merger » Click to show Spoiler - click again to hide... « Source (with paywall): https://www.ft.com/content/8a1c07f6-54c8-41...ed-7a6e4e584d40 |
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Feb 22 2024, 03:41 PM
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#1159
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Senior Member
8,667 posts Joined: Aug 2019 From: Penang <-> Singapore |
A lot of earnings coming in from Europe today. French insurance company AXA, Swiss insurance company Zurich, UK high-street lender Lloyds Banking Group, French yoghurt maker Danone, Swiss food giant Nestlé, German premium carmaker Mercedes-Benz, UK engine maker Rolls-Royce and Spanish telco Telefónica. Nestle results: https://www.nestle.com/media/mediaeventscal...ll-year-results Takudan liked this post
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Feb 26 2024, 08:23 PM
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#1160
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Senior Member
8,667 posts Joined: Aug 2019 From: Penang <-> Singapore |
Not that much related, but good info for you guys.
Proprietary Salary Info from D. E. Shaw Research (based in New York City, main office next to Times Square in Midtown Manhattan, with data centers and supporting offices in Pittsburg) Drug Discovery Fellow (3-year contract, PhD qualification and above): expected annual base salary 260k-290k USD Senior Scientist Opportunities (permanent roles like PI in academia): expected annual base salary 300k to 475k USD ML Researcher and engineer (permanent role, python experience required): expected annual base salary 300k to 600k USD Scientific/Drug Discovery Software Developer (permanent role, Python experience needed): 230k-550k USD Company policy is WFH Tuesday through Thursday, with option to WFH on Monday and Friday. In case you confuse this D. E. Shaw Research with the D. E. Shaw hedge fund, well, the research company and the hedge fund are founded by the same person (D. E. Shaw) and the research company is funded by the profits from the hedge fund and also royalties, patents, commissions etc. from collaboration with Big Pharma like Eli Lilly etc. Their Anton supercomputer is pretty good and specialized in drug molecule modelling, targeting etc. ------------------------------------ I also overheard conversations during the lunch session just now that professors earn some 100k USD a year in the US. This post has been edited by TOS: Feb 26 2024, 08:28 PM |
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